India achieved a current account surplus of USD 7.1 billion, equivalent to 0.7 percent of the national GDP, during the January-March quarter of the 2025-26 fiscal year, according to the latest data released by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI). This performance marks a significant shift in the country’s balance of payments, driven largely by robust gains in service sector exports despite broader fluctuations in global trade dynamics.
Understanding the Balance of Payments
The current account represents a country’s net trade in goods, services, and transfer payments. A surplus indicates that a nation is a net lender to the rest of the world, whereas a deficit suggests it is a net borrower. For the full 2025-26 fiscal year, India recorded a total current account deficit of USD 25.2 billion, representing 0.6 percent of GDP, which remains consistent with the previous year’s deficit levels.
Services Sector as a Growth Engine
The primary driver behind the surplus in the final quarter was the performance of the services sector. Net services receipts surged to USD 60.4 billion in Q4 2025-26, up from USD 53.3 billion during the same period in the previous year. This growth is attributed to heightened demand for Indian computer services and other professional business services in international markets.
Trade Deficit Challenges
While the services sector provided a vital buffer, the merchandise trade deficit presented a contrasting narrative. The trade deficit widened to USD 83.4 billion in the January-March quarter, a sharp increase from the USD 59.3 billion recorded in the same quarter of 2024-25. This rise in the trade deficit underscores the persistent pressure of import costs, particularly as the domestic economy maintains high demand for commodities and finished goods.
Economic Implications and Future Outlook
The surplus in the final quarter highlights the resilience of India’s services exports in navigating global economic headwinds. For policymakers and investors, the data serves as a barometer for India’s external stability and its ability to offset merchandise trade imbalances through its competitive advantage in the digital and service-based economies. Analysts will be watching whether the services export momentum can sustain itself against potential global slowdowns in technology spending. Furthermore, stakeholders will closely monitor trade policy adjustments aimed at narrowing the merchandise deficit, as the government seeks to balance domestic industrial demand with the need for a stable external balance sheet in the coming fiscal year.